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            • 1. (2016•黄浦区一模)Rosalind Franklin always liked facts.She was logical and precise,and impatient with things that were otherwise.She decided to become a scientist when she was 15.She passed the examination for admission to Cambridge University in 1938,and it sparked a family crisis.Although her family was well-to-do and had a tradition of public service and charity,her father disapproved of university education for women.He refused to pay.An aunt stepped in and said Franklin should go to school,and she would pay for it.Franklin’s mother also took her side until her father finally gave in.
                 She was invited to King’s College in London to join a team of scientists.The leader of the team assigned her to work on DNA with a graduate student.Franklin’s assumption was that it was her own project.The laboratory’s second-in-command,Maurice Wilkins,was on vacation at the time,and when he returned,their relationship was puzzling.He assumed she was to assist his work; she assumed she’d be the only one working on DNA.They had powerful personality differences as well:Franklin direct,quick,decisive,and Wilkins shy,hesitant,and passive.
              In 1953,Wilkins changed the course of DNA history by disclosing,without Franklin’s permission,her Photo 51to competing scientist James Watson,who was working on his own DNA model with Francis Crick at Cambridge.Upon seeing the photograph,Watson said,“My jaw fell open and my pulse began to race,”according to author Brenda Maddox who wrote the book Rosalind Franklin:The Dark Lady of DNA.
              The two scientists did in fact use what they saw in Photo 51as the basis for their famous model of DNA,which they published on March 7,1953,and for which they received a Nobel Prize in 1962.Crick and Watson were also able to take most of the credit for the finding:they included a footnote acknowledging that they were“stimulated by a general knowledge”of Franklin’s and Wilkin’s unpublished contribution,when much of their work was rooted in Franklin’s photo and findings.Franklin didn’t know that these men based their article on her research,and she didn’t complain either,likely as a result of her upbringing.Franklin“didn’t do anything that would invite criticism…(that was) bred into her,”Maddox said.

              66.Wilkins’relationship with Franklin was characterized by    
              A.unity and harmony    
              B.confusion and competition
              C.cooperation and miscommunication
              D.misunderstanding and conflict
              67.What does Watson mean by saying“My jaw fell open and my pulse began to race”?    
              A.He was confused that Crick had not made this discovery.
              B.He was surprised that Wilkins had discovered this information.
              C.He was satisfied with the importance of Photo 51.
              D.He was anxious about the progress Wilkins and Franklin had made.
              68.What is Brenda Maddox’s main intention according to the quote in the last paragraph?    
              A.To re-evaluate the importance of the DNA model.
              B.To criticize King’s College and Cambridge.
              C.To emphasize Franklin’s importance in science.
              D.To deny Watson’s and Crick’s contribution to science.
              69.Franklin’s career as a scientist demonstrates    
              A.that her work was pointing at the most difficult problem
              B.that she was the only female scientist during the period
              C.the importance of DNA in modern science
              D.that perseverance leads to success and recognition of field scientists.
            • 2. (2015•怀化二模)   In Silicon Valley,it's never too early to become an entrepreneur.Just ask 13-year-old David Moore.The eighth-grader has launched a company last October to develop low-cost machines to print Braille (布莱叶盲文).David built a Braille printer with a Lego Mindstorms EV3kit as a school science fair project last year after he asked his parents a simple question:How do blind people read?“Google it,“they told him.David then did some online research and was shocked to learn that Braille printers cost at least 2,000dollars-too expensive for most blind readers.
              “I just thought that price should not be there.I know that there is a simpler way to do this,“said David,who demonstrated how his printer works at the kitchen table where he spent many late nights building it.David wants to improve the“Braigo”-a name that combines Braille and Lego-and develop a desktop Braille printer that costs around 350dollars and weighs just a few pounds,compared with current models that can weigh more than 20pounds.“My end goal would probably be having most of the blind people…using my Braille printer,“said David,who lives in the Silicon Valley suburb of Santa Clara,just minutes away from Intel headquarters.
               After the Braigo won numerous awards and enthusiastic support from the blind community,David started Braigo Labs last summer with an initial 35,000dollars investment from his dad.“We as parents started to get involved more,thinking that he's on to something and this new way process has to continue,“said his father,Matthew Moore,an engineer who works for Intel.
              Intel officials were so impressed with David's printer that in November they invested an undisclosed sum in his start-up.They believe he's the youngest entrepreneur to receive venture capital money invested in exchange for a financial stake in the company.“He's solving a real problem,and he wants to go off and challenge an existing industry,“said Edward Ross,director of Inventor Platforms at Intel.Now the company is using the money to hire professional engineers and advisers to help design and build Braille printers based on David’s ideas.It aims to have a prototype (样机) ready for blind organizations to test this summer and have a Braigo printer on the market later this year.

              66.Which of the followings is Not the description of Braigo?    
              A.The name“Braigo“comes from Braille and Lego.
              B.The blind are in favor of the new type of printer.
              C.It costs less money and weighs just a few pounds.
              D.David planned to improve Braigo and make it lighter but easier to use.
              67.Which of the following words can best describe David’s personalities?    
              A.Adventurous and enthusiastic.
              B.Trustworthy and active.
              C.Childish and outgoing.
              D.Creative and independent.
              68.Which of the following is the correct order?    
              ①.Intel officials invested money in David’s start-up.
              ②.David launched a company.
              ③.David got an initia l35,000dollars investment from his dad.
              ④.David created a new Braille printer model called Braigo.
              ⑤.Braigo Labs hired professional engineers and advisers to help design and build Braille
              Printers.
              A.④③②①⑤
              B.④②⑤①③
              C.③⑤④②①
              D.②①④⑤③
              69.What can we learn from Paragraph 4?    
              A.Intel didn’t announce the amount of money it invested.
              B.No one else has ever received venture capital from Intel.
              C.Intel purchased David’s ideas to design and build Braille printers.
              D.Braigo printers have been on the market and proved a great success.
              70.The passage is most probably taken from.    
              A.a sports section    
              B.a science section   
              C.a culture section  
              D.an entertainment section.
            • 3. “I will never marry”the future Elizabeth I declared at the age of eight,and,to the terror of her people,the Great Queen kept her word.
              For four centuries,historians have guessed why Elizabeth never married.In her own day,her decision to remain single was considered absurd and dangerous.A queen needed a husband to make political decisions for her and to organize and lead her military campaigns.More importantly,she needed male heirs (继承人) to avoid a civil war after her death.
              There was no shortage of suitors for the Queen,both English courtiers (朝臣) and foreign princes,and it was confidently expected for the best part of 30years that Elizabeth would eventually marry one of them.Indeed,although she insisted that she preferred the single state,she kept these suitors in a state of permanent expectation.This was a deliberate policy on the Queen's part,since by keeping foreign princes in hope,sometimes for a decade,she kept them friendly when they might otherwise have made war on her kingdom.
              There were,indeed,good political reasons for her avoiding marriage.The disastrous union of her sister Mary I to Philip II of Spain had had an unwelcome foreign influence upon English politics.The English were generally prejudiced against the Queen taking a foreign husband,particularly a Catholic(天主教的) one.Yet if she married an English,jealousy might lead to the separation of the court.
              She once pointed out that marriage seemed too uncertain a state for her.Her father,Henry VIII,had had her mother,Anne Boleyn,killed; her stepmother Catherine Howard later suffered the same fate.
              Elizabeth had to decide her priorities.Marriage or being single?Elizabeth was far too intelligent.The choice she made was courageous and revolutionary,and,in the long run,the right one for England.

              49.To the suitors including English courtiers and foreign princes,Elizabeth    
              A.held back the truth
              B.kept them expecting on purpose
              C.gave a definite answer“no”
              D.said she preferred the single state
              50.If Elizabeth had married a foreign prince,there might have been    
              A.prejudice against her
              B.separation of the court
              C.a negative impact on English politics
              D.jealousy among English courtiers
              51.Which of the following implications is right according to the passage
                  
              A.Elizabeth’s marriage seemed too certain a state for her.
              B.Some foreign princes made war on Britain.
              C.Catherine Howard was killed by Anne Boleyn.
              D.Queen Elizabeth was not a Catholic.
              52.What is the attitude of the author towards Queen Elizabeth never marrying in her life
                  
              A.Negative.
              B.Approving.
              C.Pitiful.
              D.Neutral.
            • 4. Regarded as one of the English language's most gifted poets,John Keats wrote poetry that concentrated on imagery,human nature,and philosophy.Although Keats didn't receive much formal literary education,his own studies and passion brought him much success.Additionally,his own life situation influenced his poetry greatly.
              Growing up as a young boy in London in a lower,middle-class family,the young John didn't attend a private school,but went to a public one.His teachers and his family's friends regarded him as an optimistic boy who favored playing and fighting much more than minding his studies.After his father's death in the early 1800s,followed by his mother's passing due to tuberculosis (肺结核),he began viewing life differently.He wanted to escape the world and did so by reading anything he could get his hands on.
              At around the age of 16,the teenage John Keats began studying under a surgeon so that he too might become a doctor.However,his literary appetite had taken too much of his fancy,especially with his addiction to the poetry of Ehmund Spenser.He was able to have his first full poem published in the Examiner in 1816,entitled O Solitude!If I Must With Thee Dwell.Within two months in 1817,Keats had written an entire volume of poetry,but was sharply criticized by a magazine.However,the negative response didn't stop his pursuit of rhythm.
              John Keats'next work was Endymion,which was published in May 1818.The story involves a shepherd who falls in love with the moon goddess and leads him on an adventure of one boy's hope to overcome the limitations of being human.Following Engymion,however,he tried something more narrative-based and wrote Isabella.During this time,John Keats began seeing his limitations in poetry due to his own limit in life experiences.He would have to have the“knowledge“associated with his poems.His next work was Hyperion that would attempt to combine all that he learned.However,a bout (发作) with tuberculosis while visiting Italy would keep him from his work and eventually take his life in 1821.

              56.John Keats'attitude towards life changed because of    
              A.his early education from school                  
              B.the criticism of a magazine
              C.Edmund Spenser's poetry               
              D.the deaths of his parents
              57.What is the common thing between John Keats and his mother?    
              A.They read many books.
              B.They died of the same disease.
              C.They had a bad childhood.
              D.They showed strong interest in poetry.
              58.What do we know from the passage?    
              A.Keats once had a chance of becoming a doctor.
              B.Keats received little education at school.
              C.In 1816 Keats spent two months writing a poem.
              D.Endymion was about a real love story.
              59.While pursuing his dream of becoming a poet at first,John Keats was    
              A.knowledgeable                                          
              B.experienced     
              C.determined                                                
              D.impatient
              60.What can we infer from the passage?    
              A.The poem Hyperion wasn't completed by Keats.
              B.Edmund Spenser was the greatest poet in Keats'time.
              C.It is likely that Keats rewrote his poem Isabella.
              D.Keats'family must have been very poor when he was young.
            • 5. Growing up in rural Malawi,Africa,William Kamkwamba learned to accept that life was hard.
              He lived with his parents and seven sisters in a small clay house without electricity or running water.Like most boys in his village,William was expected to assist his parents on the family farm,as well as keep up with his school work.Each night,like most Malawians,his family went to bed early because the kerosene oil they needed to light the lamps was costly.
              A terrible drought in 2000 left many Malawians hungry,and William’s family was no exception.
              In 2003 at the age of 13,William and many other children were forced to drop out of school when their parents could no longer afford his schooling.William had to work even harder to help his family,but he wasn’t ready to give up his education.He went to the local library and took out some books to study.One book,called Using Energy,sparked William’s interest in science and gave him an idea that significantly changed his future.
              In the book,William found a picture of a windmill (风车),and a brief description of how it could be used to generate electricity from wind.He knew that there was plenty of wind in his village,and realized that if he could build a windmill like that,he could give his family and the.people in his village a much better life.There was just one problem.The book didn’t explain how to build a windmill,and neither did any of the other books in the library.
              What happened over the next year demonstrated William’s incredible ambition and determination.He began to collect any kinds of materials he thought could be useful-scraps of wood,broken bicycles,old shoes-and started to build a windmill next to his family’s house.He endured many challenges and failures.Other people in his village called him crazy and said his idea would never work.Finally,at the age of 14,William completed his first windmill.When they saw electric lights and heard the sound of music on the radio coming from William^house,the village people came running.He had done it.William Kamkwamba had found a way to capture the wind.
              Kamkwamba’s autobiography (自传),The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind^tells the story of how the rest of the world came to know about his achievements.With the help of international supporters,his village now has clean running water,solar powered lighting,and electric power.As a result of his actions,Kamkwamba was invited to study engineering at Dartmouth College,one of the top-ranking universities in the U.S.He also travels the world and gives talks about how he made his dream a reality.

              56.William went to the local library because    
              A.he wanted to find some materials for his invention   
              B.it was his favorite way to kill time and relax
              C.he wanted to continue his education    
              D.it was believed to be a way to change his fate
              57.Paragraph 3is mainly about    
              A.why the windmill is so attractive                
              B.how William got inspired by a hook
              C.why William decided to continue his education    
              D.how a windmill works to produce electricity
              58.The living conditions in William's village are much better now mainly because
                  
              A.William has helped build a power station      
              B.the villagers are greatly encouraged by William
              C.William、autobiography is locally popular    
              D.it has received much outside help
              59.William Kamkwamba can be best described as    
              A.ambitious and determined  
              B.honest and forgiving  
              C.brave and patient
              D.reasonable and humorous
              60.What is the message conveyed in the passage    
              A.We should strike while the iron is hot.
              B.A good beginning makes a good end.
              C.One who lives his dream can make a difference.
              D.You’d better not put all the eggs in one basket.
            • 6. Unlike chemists and physicists,who usually do their experiments using machines,biologists and medical researchers have to use living things like rats.But there are three Nobel prize-winning scientists who actually chose to experiment on themselves-all in the name of science,reported The Telegraph.
              1.Werner Forssmann (Nobel prize winner in 1956)
              Forssmann was a German scientist.He studied how to put a pipe inside the heart to measure the pressure inside and decide whether a patient needs surgery.
              Experiments had been done on horses before,so he wanted to try with human patients.But it was not permitted because the experiment was considered too dangerous.
              Not giving up,Forssmann decided to experiment on himself.He anaesthetized (麻醉) his own arm and made a cut,putting the pipe 30centimeters into his vein (静脉).He then climbed two floors to the X-ray room before pushing the pipe all the way into his heart.
              2.Barry Marshall (Nobel prize winner in 2005)
              Most doctors in the mid-20th century believed that gastritis was down to stress,spicy food or an unusually large amount of stomach acid.But in 1979an Australian scientist named Robin Warren found that the disease might be related to a bacteria (细菌) called Helicobacter pylori.
              So he teamed up with his colleague,Barry Marshall,to continue the study.When their request to experiment on patients was denied,Marshall bravely drank some of the bacteria.Five days later,he lost his appetite and soon was vomiting each morning-he indeed had gastritis.
              3.Ralph Steinman (Nobel prize winner in 2011)
              This Canadian scientist discovered a new type of immune system cell called the dendritic cell.He believed that it had the ability to fight against cancer.
              Steinman knew he couldn’t yet use his method to treat patients.So in 2007,when doctors told him that he had cancer and that it was unlikely for him to live longer than a year,he saw an opportunity.
              With the help of his colleagues,he gave himself three different vaccines based on his research and a total of eight experimental therapies (疗法).Even though Steinman eventually died from his cancer,he lived four and a half years,much longer than doctors had said he would.

              33.The passage is mainly about    
              A.some dangerous experiments that Nobel prize winners did on themselves
              B.difficulties that scientists went through in order to make important discoveries
              C.the reasons why some scientists chose to experiment on themselves
              D.three Nobel prize winners who did experiments on themselves
              34.Which of the following is TRUE according to the article?    
              A.Forssmann’s experiment ended in failure.
              B.Forssmann managed to do his experiment on different kinds of animals.
              C.Barry Marshall succeeded by drinking some Helicobacter pylori.
              D.Barry Marshall’s experiment on himself confirmed that most doctors’belief about gastritis was correct.
              35.From the text,we can conclude that Ralph Steinman    
              A.discovered a new type of cancer cell called the dendritic cell
              B.tried different therapies containing the dendritic cell on himself
              C.knew that he himself would have cancer and die from it
              D.believed that he was better than doctors at treating cancer.
            • 7. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis was one of the most private women in the world,yet when she went to work as an editor in the last two decades of her life,she revealed (展现) herself as she did nowhere else.
                   After the death of her second husband,Greek shipping magnate AristotieOnassis laqueline’s close friend and former White House social?Letitis Baldrige made a suggestion that she consider a career in publishing.After consideration,
                   Jacqueline accepted it.Perhaps she hoped to find there some ideas about how to live her own life.She became not less but more interested in reading.For the last 20years of her life,Jacqueline worked as a publisher’s editor,first at Viking,then at Doubleday,pursuing(追求)a late-life career longer than her two marriages combined.During her time in publishing,she was responsible for managing and editing more than 100sucessfully marketed books.Among the first books were In the Russian Style and Inventive Paris Clothes.She also succeeded in persuading TV hosts Bill Moyers and Joseph Campbell to transform their popular television conversation into a book,The Power of Myth.The book went on to become an international best-seller.She dealt  too.with Michael Jackson as he prepared his autobiography(自传),Moonwalk.
                  Jaequelinered for her name and for her social relations,but she soon proved
                   Her worth.Her shoicas,suggestions and widespread social relations were of benefit both to the publishing Since and to Jacqueline herself.In the books she selected for publication,she built on a lifetime of spending time by herself as a reader and left a record of the growth of her mind.Her books are the autobiofraphy she never wrote,Her role as First lady,in the end,was overshadowed by her performance as an editor
               However,few knew that she had achteved so much.
              68.We can learn from the passage that Jecqueline    
              A.because fond of reading after working as an editor
              B.was in charge of publishing 100books
              C.promoted lier books through social relations
              D.gained a lot from her career as an editor
              69.The underlined sentence in the last paragph probably means this    
              A.Jscqueline’s ended up as an editor rather than as First Lady
              B.Jscqueline’s life as First Lady was more colorful than as an editor
              C.Jscqueline was more successful as an editor than as First Lady
              D.Jscqueline’s role as First Lady was more brilliant than as an editor
              70.What can be inferred from the passage?    
              A.Jscqueline’s two marriages lasted more than 20 years
              B.Jscqueline’s own publishing firm was set up eventually
              C.Jscqueline’s views and beliefs were reflected in the books she edited
              D.Jscqueline’s achievements were widely known
              71.The passage is mainly    
              A.an introduction of jacqueline’s life both as Fist Lady and as editor.
              B.a brief description of jacqueline’s lifelong experiences.
              C.a brief account of jacqueline’s career as an editor in her last 20years.
              D.an analysis of Jscqueline’s social relations in publishing.
            • 8. We know the famous ones-the Thomas Edisons and the Alexander Graham Bells-but what about the less famous inventors?What about the people who invented the traffic light and the windshield wiper(雨刮器)?Shouldn’t we know who they are?
              Joan Mclean think so.In fact,Mclean,a professor of physics at Mountain University in Range,feels so strongly about this matter that she’s developed a course on the topic.In addition to learning“who”invented”what”,however,Mclean also likes her students to learn the answers to the”why”and”how”questions.According to Mclean,”When students learn the answers to these questions,they are better prepared to recognize opportunities for inventing and more motivated to give inventing a try.”
              So,just what is the story behind the windshield wiper?Well,Mary Anderson came up with the idea in 1902after a visit to Mew York City.The day was cold and stormy,but Anderson still wanted to see the sights,so she jumped aboard a streetcar.Noticing that the driver was struggling to see through the snow covering the winshield,she found hersefe wondering why there couldn’t be a buolt-in devic for cleaing the window.Still wondering about this when she returned home to Birmingham,Alabama,Anderson started drafting out solutions.One of her ideas,a lever(操作杆)on the inside of a vehicle that would contral an arm on the outside,became the first windshield wiper.
              Today we benefit from countless inventions and innovations,It’s hard to imagine driving without Garrett A.Morgan’s traffic light.It’s equally impossible to picture a world without Katherine J.Blodgett’s innovation that makes glass invisible,Can you picture life without clear windows and eyeglasses?

              56.By mentionong“traffic light”and“windshield wiper”,the author indicates that countless inventions are    
              A.beneficial,because their inventors are famous
              B.beneficial,though their inventors are less  famous
              C.not useful,because their inventors are less famous
              D.not useful,though their inventors are  famous
              57.Professor Joan McLean’s course aims to    
              A.add colour and variety to students’campus life
              B.inform students of the windshield wiper’s invention
              C.carry out the requirements by Mountain University
              D.pre[are students to try theie own invention
              58.Tommy Lee’s invention of the unbreakable umbrella was    
              A.not eventually accepted by the umbrella producer
              B.inspired by the story behind the windshield wiper
              C.due to his dream of being caught in a rainstorm
              D.not related to Professor Joan McLean’s lectures
              59.Which 0f the following can best serve as the title of this passage?    
              A.How to Help Students to Sell Their Inventions to Producers?
              B.How to Design a Built-in Dervice for Cleaning the Window?
              C.Shouldn’t We Know Who Inventd the Windshield Wiper?
              D.Shouldn’t We Develop Invention Courses in Universities?
            • 9. William Butler Yeats,a most famous Irish writer,was born in Dublin on June 13,1865.His childhood lacked the harmony (和睦) that was typical of a happy family.Later,Yeats shocked his family by saying that he remembered“little of childhood but its pain”.In fact,he inherited (继承) excellent taste in art from his family--both his father and his brother were painters.But he finally settled on literature,particularly drama (戏剧) and poetry.
              Yeats had strong faith in coming of new artistic movements.He set himself the fresh task in founding an Irish national theatre in the late 1890s.His early theatrical experiments,however,were not received favorably at the beginning.He didn’t lose heart,and finally enjoyed success in his poetical drama.
              Compared with his dramatic works,Yeats’[s poems attract much admiring notice.The subject matter includes love,nature,history,time and aging.Though Yeats generally relied on very traditional forms,he brought modern sensibility to them.As his literary life progressed,his  poetry grew finer and richer,which led him to worldwide recognition.
              He had not enjoyed a major public life since winning the Nobel Price in 1923.Yet,he continued writing almost to the end of his life.Had Yeats stopped writing at age 40,he would who probably now his valued as a manor poet,for there is no other example in literary history of a poet Auden wrote,among others,the falling liners:
              Earth,receive an honored guest:
              William Yeats is laid to rest.
              Let the Irish vessel (船) lie
              Emptied of its poetry.

              68.Which of the following can describe Yeats’s family?    
              A.It filled Yeats’s childhood with laughter.
              B.It was shocked by Yeats’s choice.
              C.It was a typically wealthy family.
              D.It had an artistic atmosphere.
              69.According to the passage,what do we know about Yeats’s life?    
              A.Yeats founded the first Irish theater.
              B.Yeats stuck to modern forms in his poetry.
              C.Yeats began to produce his best works from the 1910s.
              D.Yeats was not favored by the public until the 1923Noble Prize.
              70.What kind of feeling is expressed in W.H.Auden’s lines?    
              A.Envy     B.Sympathy   C.Emptiness    D.Admiration
              71.What is the passage mainly about?    
              A.Yeats’s literary achievements
              B.Yeats’s historical influence
              C.Yeats’s artistic ambition
              D.Yeats’s national honor.
            • 10. When Mary Moore began her high school in 1951,her mother told her,“Be sure and take a typing course so when this show business thing doesn't work out,you'll have something to rely on.“Mary responded in typical teenage fashion.From that moment on,“the very last thing I ever thought about doing was taking a typing course,”she recalls.
                  The show business thing worked out,of course.In her career,Mary won many awards.Only recently,when she began to write Growing Up Again,did she regret ignoring her morn,“I don't know how to use a computer,“she admits.
                   Unlike her 1995 autobiography,After All,her second book is less about life as an award-winning actress and more about living with diabetes (糖尿病). All the money from the book is intended for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF),an organization she serves as international chairman.“I felt there was a need for a book like this,“she says.“I didn't want to lecture,but I wanted other diabetics to know that things get better when we're self-controlled and do our part in managing the disease.”
                   But she hasn't always practiced what she teaches.In her book,she describes that awful day,almost 40years ago,when she received two pieces of life-changing news.First,she had lost the baby she was carrying,and second,tests showed that she had diabetes.In a childlike act,she left the hospital and treated herself to a box of doughnuts (甜甜圈).Years would pass before she realized she had to grow up---again---and take control of her diabetes,not let it control her.Only then did she kick her three-pack-a-day cigarette habit,overcome her addiction to alcohol,and begin to follow a balanced diet.
                   Although her disease has affected her eyesight and forced her to the sidelines of the dance floor,she refuses to fall into self-pity.“Everybody on earth can ask,'why me?'about something or other,“she insists.“It doesn't do any good.No one is immune (免疫的) to heartache,pain,and disappointments.Sometimes we can make things better by helping others.I've come to realize the importance of that as I've grown up this second time.I want to speak out and be as helpful as I can be.”

              61.Why did Mary feel regretful?    
              A.She didn't achieve her ambition.
              B.She didn't take care of her mother.
              C.She didn't complete her high school.
              D.She didn't follow her mother's advice.
              62,We can know that before 1995Mary    
              A.had two books published
              B.received many career awards
              C.knew how to use a computer
              D.supported the JDRF by writing
              63.Mary's second book Growing Up Again is mainly about her    
              A.living with diabetes
              B.successful show business
              C.service for an organization
              D.remembrance of her mother
              64.When Mary received the life-changing news,she    
              A.lost control of herself B.began a balanced diet
              C.Med to get a treatment D.behaved in an adult way
              65.What can we know from the last paragraph?    
              A.Mary feels pity for herself.
              B.Mary has recovered from her disease.
              C.Mary wants to help others as much as possible.
              D.Mary determines to go back to the dance floor.
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